Thank you, Mr. Allison.
Thank you for the opportunity to make a presentation today, and thank you for coming north. It really is important to us not to be forgotten in national tours.
The Yukon Anti-Poverty Coalition's mandate is to facilitate the elimination of poverty in the Yukon through awareness, advocacy, and action. We were formed in 1996, and our more than 130 members have become an action-based team who partner with other community members on issues involving food, shelter, and access to services. Today I want to add our voice to concerns and suggestions that I expect you will hear across the country. I want to give you a bit of a Yukon perspective on our experience with federal initiatives that work and with those that could be better.
I particularly want to speak about process and encourage you to think about two themes that we found very effective in our anti-poverty work here: inter-agency collaboration and user input.
I mention collaboration particularly with respect to housing solutions. The federal government needs to reinvest in social housing programs to ensure that low-income individuals and families have a means of acquiring adequate, safe, and affordable housing. We need a continuum of housing, from shelters through supported living to independent living, with quality facilities available at all levels and with programs to ensure that people are living with dignity and as independently as possible for them.
Canada needs a national housing strategy so that every jurisdiction is working towards the same end. The federal government has been successful in facilitating community collaboration and project funding through the homelessness partnering strategy. We've seen very positive results from inter-agency collaboration with the key players all at the same table. We appreciate the role the federal government played as a catalyst in that example; more funding and a less onerous application process for that program would benefit those living in inadequate housing and those trying to support them.
On user input and the design of programs, it's critical that people living in poverty be asked what the solution would be to their struggles, and we hope your process will include that kind of consultation. In our experience in the Yukon, that kind of consultation has been incredibly useful. I have a small example.
About ten years ago, a focus group was held locally on a Saturday afternoon with mostly single moms on social assistance. One of the issues they were asked about was how a small amount of federal money that was targeted for services to children could be used. A territorial government official was there, and he made a few suggestions. They didn't fly. The group didn't think those ideas were really going to make a difference.
Then the members of the focus group talked about how very hurtful it was that their children couldn't participate in sports or music lessons like their friends, because it was all cost-prohibitive. Because of that conversation and the input of that focus group, the Kids Recreation Fund was established here. There was additional money from the territorial government, businesses, and individuals, and since 1999, over 4,000 children have benefited from the program. It was federal seed money spent in the way the intended beneficiaries wanted it most, and a really successful program was born from that.
I also want to talk about national links and some of the broader pan-Canada issues that we here have an interest in.
The Yukon Anti-Poverty Coalition supports the Dignity for All campaign of Canada Without Poverty. We know you will find comprehensive and well-researched input from them and hope you find it useful. We join with them in encouraging you to recognize poverty as a human rights issue, to develop a federal plan that complements provincial and territorial plans, to ensure enduring federal commitment and accountability for results, and to provide sufficient federal investment to provide social security for all Canadians.
We want to add our voice particularly to suggestions about federal support for persons with disabilities who cannot work and for able persons who could work. In a recent discussion with a senior territorial government official, we heard that over one-third of Yukoners living on social assistance have disabilities. We note that the title of your committee includes the status of persons with disabilities, so we hope you will recommend that the federal government work cooperatively with all regions of the country to facilitate the provision of a consistent nationwide disability pension. We must get persons with disabilities off the welfare rolls while giving them the support they need with dignity.
On the other hand, people who can work need to be provided with incentives and supports to do so. Employment is of primary importance to not being poor. All levels of government should work closely with the private sector to assist Canadians to develop the skills and supports to find meaningful employment, and this may entail rethinking traditional models of employment and organizing labour forces to allow employees to work to their maximum capacity, and not necessarily in traditional 40-hour work weeks.
Finally, employment insurance needs to take seriously the employment realities in the Yukon. Traditional trapping, fishing, woodcutting, and tourism are all seasonal in nature, and that reality needs to be taken into account when decisions are made regarding eligibility for employment insurance.
In conclusion, all of the above will only work through partnerships, which need to be developed and fostered among federal, provincial, territorial, and first nations governments, as well as with non-governmental poverty-serving organizations. We all own the problem, we all share the cost of the problem, we all have a responsibility to solve the problem, and we all have a piece of the answer. The problems will never get satisfactorily solved if we do not devise ways of working more cooperatively and with a very concerted agenda to eliminate poverty in this great and wealthy country of ours.
We have the resources. We have the will. What we do not have are the kinds of partnerships that allow us to forget our respective jurisdictional ownership and operate on a model of joint ownership, mutual respect, and equality in decision-making.
Thank you.